Good music makes you feel something.

There are still great artists in the country format.

Not a lot of the country format I enjoy listening to.

The Doobie Brothers are one of my favorites of all time.

It's a crazy experience for me to be in a Foo Fighters video.

When I'm home, I'm Daddy, and everything is completely normal.

We always push the boundaries on the styles we put on a record.

To me, country music has always been the home for a great song.

I'm from Georgia, and everybody gathers around food in the South.

I didn't think I liked country music. Then I got into Garth Brooks.

Our music has been an incredible gift to help us make a difference.

I'm opinionated because I care so much about the music and the songs.

We're really blessed that we've been as well received as we have been.

Camp Southern Ground is a lot more than a camp. It's more of a campus.

I've been making some more electronic music, which I really enjoy doing.

I have an outdoor kitchen at home in Georgia, and I try to never eat inside.

We want to support Nashville, support the community there and be a part of it.

I had a restaurant in Georgia for a while, and I really miss feeding everybody.

'A Pirate Looks at 40,' we had to do that song. I've been covering that forever.

If I hear one more tailgate in the moonlight, Daisy Dukes song, I wanna throw up.

Family comes out whenever we know it's gonna be steady on a run that's continuous.

We don't want to abandon any of the market we have now. We just want to gain new market.

I don't like cooking just for myself; I enjoy feeding other people, particularly outdoors.

A lot of concerts leave you wanting for something good to eat or drink while you're there.

Getting to have a higher purpose other than just being successful is very necessary for me.

I'm no different than any other human being. I play music for a living, and we're very blessed.

In my opinion - in Georgia, there's a town called Lula. And Lula, Georgia, has the best peaches.

When we cover a Chainsmokers song in our live show with ZBB, people are dancing and going crazy.

We can help show data on how much the kids can improve when their home life changes a little bit.

I don't ever want to stop making country, and I don't want to stop making electronic music, either.

When songs make me wanna throw up, it makes me ashamed to even be in the same genre as those songs.

I hope everybody enjoys our input on 'Black Water' - it sure was a lot of fun getting to record it.

It's important that people come see our show, because we are performers. We wanted people to see that.

Talent alone gets you nowhere. You really have to have the grit, and you gotta have a love for people.

We bled writing these songs, we bled in the studio, and now we're out bleeding getting them right live.

My brother's 21 years older than me, so I grew up doing more adult things. Like listening to old music.

You've got to be willing to put the time into seeing who's got talent and who's going to do a great job.

We just kept going down the road, we kept trying to make the next record, the right choices to get there.

Visually, a lot of the electronic artists have really interesting video and interesting things like that.

We're all continuing to grow up and get better as musicians, and the chemistry as a band continues to deepen.

I never get used to going out and seeing 20, 30,000 people that are there to see us play. It's kind of surreal.

I try to be really conscious. I don't want to ever look back and regret not raising my kids and not being around.

We're proud to be lifetime musicians and a band that lives like a band and loves the music and gives our lives to it.

People come up to me sometimes and ask for a picture but don't even say hello. They sort of forget that I'm a person.

I don't want to look back and say, 'Yeah, I was really successful, but I failed at fatherhood because I wasn't there.'

I try to get away and take my motorcycle on a ride whenever I can. I'll take my bike out before the show and just cruise.

There are still artists that do a great job with a song, and they care about the lyrics, and it's not just mindless drivel.

It's an honor to live on a legacy, getting to do what we love to do and try to be the best musicians that we can possibly be.

The chemistry that you get from living with your band and creating music and recording with your band translates to the stage.

When you're wearing a motorcycle helmet, people don't know who you are. So I just wander around and, yeah, it's pretty awesome.

Share This Page